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US
ambassador Christopher Dell's speech
Media Monitoring Project Zimbabwe (MMPZ)
Weekly Media Update 2006-18
Monday May 1st 2006 – Sunday May 7th 2006
ONLY the private
media fully reported on US ambassador Christopher Dell’s speech
in which he criticised the country’s poor human rights record, particularly
the erosion of freedom of expression, which he said was stalling
economic development.
He was addressing
students at the National
University of Science and Technology to mark the World Press
Freedom Day.
The Financial
Gazette (4/5), for example, quoted Dell noting that in societies
that upheld freedom of expression, "open debate can flourish"
enabling government to come up with policies that "maximize
the effectiveness of economic players" and "instill
confidence in domestic and international investors to act in such
a climate".
To illustrate
the correlation between civil liberties and economic prosperity,
he pointed out that almost all SADC countries that have "become
more participatory, democratic and tolerant of free expression"
had "registered real per capita GDP growth"
of between 2 and 6% in 2005 while Zimbabwe, which did not "embrace
sound economic and democratic reforms", had recorded
a negative GDP rate of "minus 6.5%".
A full text
of his speech appeared in The Standard (7/5).
Typically, the
government media either censored his statement or carried articles
that dismissed outright his observations.
For instance,
the Chronicle (4/5) gave emphasis to the questions Dell was
asked during the event. His comments on the importance of free speech
were only mentioned in passing and in the context of his alleged
"grilling" by students over US’ "demonisation"
and "imposition of sanctions" on the country.
The next day,
the paper rubbished the ambassador’s arguments saying "much
as Press freedom is one of the fundamental tenets of democracy,
it is subordinate to the sovereignty of any nation"
and as such, government "cannot allow the likes of Mr
Dell who habour a neo-liberal agenda on Zimbabwe to use that "freedom"
to further their ulterior motives".
The Herald’s
vituperative columnist Nathaniel Manheru (6/5) and The Sunday
Mail article, Ambassador Dell’s selective amnesia, were
equally dismissive of Dell’s statements.
But while the
official media tried to project his observations as hypocritical
and driven by the US’ determination to soil Zimbabwe’s image, the
private media recorded seven fresh incidents of rights violations.
All the cases stemmed from the arrest of civic activists, university
students, school children, members of the public and journalists
from Botswana on allegations of breaching sections of the repressive
POSA, AIPPA
and the Miscellaneous Offences Act.
In fact, The
Standard reported the Zimbabwe
Human Rights NGO Forum revealing that there was a "sharp
increase" in cases of torture "involving
police officers and soldiers". In March alone the Forum
recorded 75 such incidents.
The government
media ignored these issues.
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fact sheet
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